In the beginning of 2018 we surveyed developers to identify the State of Developer
Ecosystem. Over 6,000+ developers share their insights on modern technologies,
programming languages, frameworks, and tools of choice for software development.

The Python Software Foundation came together with JetBrains to conduct the official Python
Developers Survey to identify the latest trends and gather insights into the world of
today's Python developers. Over 9,500 developers from almost 150 countries participated
in the research helping us map out an accurate landscape of the Python community.

Through late 2016 to early 2017 we polled over 5,000 developers to identify the State of
the Developer Ecosystem. This huge report covers every language and market with a
JetBrains presence. The raw data is also available.

We conducted a survey with over 1,500 participants to find out the most popular issue
tracking tools and gain insight into how they are used by different members of software
development teams and how developers like them.

A survey conducted among more than 1,000 Python developers to identify the latest trends and
gather insight into how the world of Python development looks in 2016. We can see Python
becoming the language of choice for more and more developers and Python 3 gaining more
popularity.

As we considered adding a dedicated tool for working with databases and SQL, we felt it was
necessary to better understand how developers used databases. We ran a survey gathering
responses from about 2,000 developers. Read this report to find out what we learned.

Before going ahead with CLion, we needed better insight into the C/C++ market, to know things
like, Who are C and C++ developers? What areas do they work in? What tools do they use? and
so forth. This research was instrumental in setting our first roadmap. It reinforced our
decision to start with the CMake+GCC/Clang+GDB toolchain, among others. Read on for more
details.

Every year DailyJS, a popular blog on JavaScript development, runs a Developer Survey among
their readers. We decided to have a closer look at the results of the 2014 survey, which
polled over 4,000 developers to see how many rely on WebStorm and IntelliJ IDEA for their
daily tasks and whether their choice of frameworks, tools and practices differs in any way
from all survey respondents. (Kudos to DailyJS for making raw data publicly available.)